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Poison Ivy Eastern poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) is a woody, perennial vine or small shrub that can be found in fields, pastures, woodlands, farms and home landscapes. As a vine, it attaches itself to trees or other structures with hairy, aerial roots borne along the stem.

Eastern poison ivy foliage exhibiting smooth leaf margins Joey Williamson, ©2010 HGIC, Clemson Extension

Poison ivy has compound leaves that occur in threes (trifoliate or three leaflets). The edges of the leaflets can be smooth, wavy, lobed or toothed. Some leaves may resemble oak leaves. Atlantic poison oak (T. pubescens) looks similar to poison ivy, but it generally grows more upright and has hairs on both upper and lower leaf surfaces. Most mature poison ivy plants will flower and produce clusters of white, waxy fruit. The entire plant is poisonous because all parts contain the irritating oil urushiol. Urushiol is a colorless or slightly yellow oil found in the leaves, stems and roots. The oil can remain active for months on objects. It can be picked up on tools,

clothing and the fur of pets. Therefore, anything that may carry the oil should be carefully washed. Even dead plants or roots may cause allergic reactions for a couple of years.

Eastern poison ivy foliage exhibiting serrate (toothed) leaf margins Joey Williamson, ©2010 HGIC, Clemson Extension

Some people are more sensitive than others to the effects of poison ivy. Sensitive people often develop a severe skin rash within hours after contact. Highly allergic people may develop a rash if they inhale smoke when burning poison ivy in brush piles, or if they contact pets with the toxin on their fur. However, sensitivity can change from time to time so that someone who was not affected by it at one time can have a reaction at another time. The plants are most dangerous in spring and summer when oil content is highest. For those sensitive to the oil, a linear rash, resembling small insect bites, will appear within 12 to 48 hours, but a reaction can take up to two weeks to occur. This rash develops into a more severe rash and blisters.

Fall color of Eastern poison ivy Joey Williamson, ©2007 HGIC, Clemson Extension Eastern poison ivy foliage exhibiting lobed leaf margins Joey Williamson, ©2010 HGIC, Clemson Extension

Washing with running water is recommended. Washing with soaps that contain oils, such as complexion soaps, can actually spread the irritating oil and make the rash more widespread. Unless the oil is removed from the skin within 10 minutes of exposure, a reaction is inevitable in extremely sensitive individuals. Less sensitive people may have up to four hours to wash it off, although it is generally accepted that the oil binds to the skin in 30 minutes. Thereafter, it is extremely difficult to remove with water. Rubbing alcohol is a better solvent for the oil than is water. There are specially prepared cleansing agents (such as Tecnu Skin Cleanser, Tecnu Extreme Medicated Poison Ivy Scrub, and Zanfel) that remove much of the rash-causing oil if applied to the skin within 4 to 8 hours of contact.

Control Poison ivy grows fairly quickly and propagates itself by underground rhizomes and seeds. Seeds are quickly spread by birds and other animals that eat the small fruits. Poison ivy can get started in the landscape from a seed dropped by a bird and may quickly become a widespread problem. It often grows in shrubs and groundcovers making it difficult to control. Don’t confuse poison ivy with Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia), which also grows as both a groundcover and climbs trees as a vine. However, Virginia creeper plants have compound leaves with five leaflets rather than three.

Another treatment to help prevent a rash following exposure is with a manganese sulfate solution. A manganese sulfate solution has been shown to be effective both to inactivate urushiol on the skin, to relieve itching, and probably acts as a chelating agent for detoxification of urushiol. Dr. West's Poison Ivy, Oak, Sumac Cleanser is the most common manganese sulfate solution available for treatment of poison ivy rashes. Ivy Shield, Ivy Block Lotion, and Ivy X Poison Oak Lotion are protective agents for sensitive individuals to reduce the risk of a rash when spending time in areas with these plants.

Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) has leaves in groups of five. Joey Williamson, ©2014 HGIC, Clemson Extension

For light infestations, dig up small plants. You can also repeatedly cut back the plants to ground level. Eventually they starve to death. Start cutting early in the spring, about the time leaves unfold. When new growth appears, cut again. Inspect the plants every week or two. Whenever you see green growth, cut the shoots back to the ground. If you choose to eradicate poison oak or poison ivy by cutting back the plants, you should protect your hands and arms. Always wear a long-sleeved shirt and long pants. Use protective gloves. Launder the clothing separately from the family laundry. Instead of disposable gloves, consider using plastic bags, the long kind that newspapers and bread loaves come in. Slip each hand into a bag and keep the bags secured to your arms with rubber bands. When you have finished cutting, remove the bags by turning them inside out. Then be sure to discard them, because the bags will now be contaminated with urushiol, the oil that causes the allergic skin reaction. To eradicate poison oak and poison ivy chemically, use an herbicide that contains glyphosate, triclopyr, or a 3-way herbicide that contains 2,4-D amine, dicamba and mecoprop. See Table 1 for products containing these active ingredients. These herbicides can kill desirable plants, so be careful. If the poison ivy or poison oak is growing among plants you want to save, you can cut back the poison ivy or poison oak and spray or paint the herbicide only on the freshly cut stems or stump. If there are no desirable plants nearby, you can spray or paint poison ivy and poison oak without cutting them back first. Read and follow label directions whenever using any herbicides. The herbicides glyphosate, 2,4-D amine, dicamba, mecoprop and triclopyr are translocated from the leaves and cut stems to the rest of the plant, eventually killing the shoots and roots. Repeated applications may be necessary. Depending on weather and other factors, it may take one to several weeks before you discover whether you have successfully eradicated the plant, so be patient. Herbicides work better when you spray at the right time. Poison ivy and poison oak are most sensitive to 2,4-D amine and dicamba treatments in late spring or early summer when the plants are actively

growing rapidly. Triclopyr offers the best control after the leaves fully expand in the spring and before leaf color changes in the fall. Glyphosate offers the best control when applied between 2 weeks before and 2 weeks after full bloom (early summer) and should be mixed to a 2% solution. In lawns, many of the 3-way herbicides may be applied to tall fescue, bermudagrass, zoysiagrass, St. Augustinegrass and centipedegrass for poison ivy control. Be sure to read the label for safe use on each turfgrass species and for the amount of product to use per gallon of spray. Applications may be repeated. Triclopyr may be safely applied to tall fescue lawns only, although some products are not labeled for use on residential lawns. See Table 1 for products. If triclopyr or 2,4-D containing products are applied to lawns for weed control, do not use the clippings for mulch in vegetable gardens or around ornamentals as plant injury or death may result. There are also products that are mixes of 2,4-D, dicamba and triclopyr that should give enhanced control of poison ivy in lawns and areas that are not near desirable plants. When herbicides are applied to beds intended for future planting of ornamentals, care must be taken as various herbicides may injure the plants to be installed. For planned beds, glyphosate has far less soil activity (a few days) as compared with the 3way herbicides (a few weeks) and triclopyr (several months). Glyphosate is the safest choice for spray application in existing flower and shrub beds, so long as care is taken to prevent drift to non-target plants. Glyphosate applications are much less apt to move through the soil, be absorbed by roots, and injure existing woody ornamental shrubs. See Table 1 for brands and products. Care must be taken to not allow any of these of these products to touch the foliage, stems or trunks of desirable plants. If the bark is thin, many herbicides can move through the bark and into the plant’s food and water transport system (the phloem and xylem elements), and result in severe plant injury or death.

Table 1. Examples of Post-emergence Spray Herbicides for Control of Poison Ivy. Brands & Specific Products Ortho Max Poison Ivy & Tough Brush Killer Concentrate Ferti-lome Brush Killer Stump Killer Concentrate Ortho Weed B Gon Chickweed, Clover & Oxalis Killer for Lawns Concentrate Hi-Yield Turflon Ester Specialty Herbicide Concentrate Bayer Advanced Weed Killer for Lawns Concentrate; & RTS1 Bayer Advanced Southern Weed Killer for Lawns Concentrate; & RTS1 Ferti-lome Weed-Out Lawn Weed Killer Concentrate Southern Ag Lawn Weed Killer with Trimec Concentrate Spectracide Weed Stop For Lawns RTU2 Ortho Weed B Gon Max for Southern Lawns Concentrate; & RTS1; & RTU2 Spectracide Weed Stop for Lawns Concentrate; & RTS1

Roundup Original Concentrate, Roundup Pro Herbicide, Martin’s Eraser Systemic Weed & Grass Killer, Quick Kill Grass & Weed Killer Bonide Kleenup Weed & Grass Killer 41% Super Concentrate Hi-Yield Super Concentrate Maxide Super Concentrate 41% Weed & Grass Killer Super Concentrate Killzall Weed & Grass Killer Tiger Brand Quick Kill Concentrate Ultra Kill Weed & Grass Killer Concentrate Gordon’s Groundwork Concentrate 50% Super Weed & Grass Killer Zep Enforcer Weed Defeat III,

Post-emergence Herbicide Active Ingredient

% Active Ingredient in Product

Labeled for Use on Listed Turfgrass Species

Triclopyr

8.0

None

Triclopyr

8.8

None

Triclopyr

8.0

Tall Fescue Zoysiagrass (use at lower label rate)

Triclopyr

61.6

Tall Fescue

2,4-D Mecoprop Dicamba

7.59 1.83 0.84

2,4-D Mecoprop Dicamba 2,4-D Mecoprop Dicamba 2,4-D Mecoprop Dicamba 2,4-D Mecoprop Dicamba Carfentrazone 2,4-D Mecoprop Dicamba

5.88 5.45 1.21 3.05 5.30 1.29 0.593 0.144 0.066 4.01 0.49 0.27 0.16 7.57 2.73 0.71

Glyphosate

41 – 50%

Tall Fescue Bermudagrass Zoysiagrass St. Augustinegrass (use at lower label rate) Centipedegrass (use at lower label rate)

None

Eliminator Weed & Grass Killer Super Concentrate Monterey Remuda Full Strength 41% Glyphosate Knock Out Weed & Grass Killer Super Concentrate Southern States Grass & Weed Killer Concentrate II Total Kill Pro Weed & Grass Killer Herbicide Ace Concentrate Weed & Grass Killer 1 2

RTS: Ready-to-Spray (hose-end sprayer) RTU: Ready-to-Use (pre-mixed spray bottle for spot spraying)

Caution: Pollinating insects, such as honey bees and bumblebees, can be adversely affected by the use of pesticides. Avoid the use of spray pesticides (both insecticides and fungicides), as well as soilapplied, systemic insecticides unless absolutely necessary. If spraying is required, always spray late in the evening to reduce the direct impact on pollinating insects. Always try less toxic alternative sprays first for the control of insect pests and diseases. For example, sprays with insecticidal soap, horticultural oil, neem oil extract, spinosad, Bacillus thuringiensis (B.t.), or botanical oils can help control many small insect pests and mites that affect garden and landscape plants. Neem oil extract or botanical oil sprays may also reduce plant damage by repelling many insect pests. Practice cultural techniques to prevent or reduce the incidence of plant diseases, including pre-plant soil improvement, proper plant spacing, crop rotation, applying mulch, applying lime and fertilizer based on soil test results, and avoiding over-head irrigation and frequent watering of established plants. Additionally, there are less toxic spray

fungicides that contain sulfur or copper soap, and biological control sprays for plant diseases that contain Bacillus subtilis. However, it is very important to always read and follow the label directions on each product. For more information, contact the Clemson Extension Home & Garden Information Center. Pesticides updated by Joey Williamson, HGIC Horticulture Extension Agent, Clemson University, 10/16. Revised by Joey Williamson, HGIC Horticulture Extension Agent (9/10). Originally prepared by Debbie Shaughnessy, HGIC Information Specialist, and Bob Polomski, Extension Consumer Horticulturist, Clemson University. New 06/99. Images added 10/14. This information is supplied with the understanding that no discrimination is intended and no endorsement of brand names or registered trademarks by the Clemson University Cooperative Extension Service is implied, nor is any discrimination intended by the exclusion of products or manufacturers not named. All recommendations are for South Carolina conditions and may not apply to other areas. Use pesticides only according to the directions on the label. All recommendations for pesticide use are for South Carolina only and were legal at the time of publication, but the status of registration and use patterns are subject to change by action of state and federal regulatory agencies. Follow all directions, precautions and restrictions that are listed.

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Clemson University Cooperating with U.S. Department of Agriculture, South Carolina Counties, Extension Service, Clemson, South Carolina. Issued in Furtherance of Cooperative Extension Work in Agriculture and Home Economics, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914 Public Service Activities